One more episode of How I Met Your Mother and then we finally bid adieu to the series. Last night's episode stirred up a lot of different thoughts for me. If you regularly read this column, you know by now that I'm an avid Pearl Jam fan (to put it mildly). Imagine my surprise to hear Future Days score the actual wedding ceremony of Barney and Robyn? While I'm ALWAYS happy to hear the band's music on any primetime show (or even Howard Stern in the morning), I'm not sure licensing a song to a sitcom that has clearly outstayed its welcome gives me the same warm and fuzzy feeling.

All that said, here are a couple of thoughts:

1) Good on the band for getting that song out to a different audience that might not otherwise be exposed to it (and for getting paid);

"What 'that' might entail is still up for debate for the next week. Milioti recently shrugged off suggestions that the Mother has been dead from the narrator's vantage point since the beginning as 'insane,' while Bays and Thomas' last public take on the finale was basically a very convivial 'no comment.'

"Regardless, Radnor says his intel on the ending is not something he ever really focused on. And that bit he was let in on in the first season wasn't even mentioned to him again until they moved into the final run.

"'I knew that one big plot thing early, but it wasn't something that I thought about so much as we were going on,' he says. 'I always tried to remember that the version of Ted I was playing was moving forward and didn't know everything. He wasn't the narrator [Bob Saget], with the benefit of hindsight. It was always better for me to just read the episodes each week and try to play him as honestly as I could each week. I trusted them that they were going to take him on the right journey.'"

Per Deadline, "How I Met Your Dad is making a casting change. Actress-singer Krysta Rodriguez, who was to play one of the leads, is departing the hybrid pilot. In the vein of the original series,HIMYD tells the story from a female point of view, that of Sally (Greta Gerwig), and revolves around a new group of friends in New York. Rodriguez was to play Sally’s best friend Juliet, a sexy, flamboyant force of nature who runs the most successful fashion blog in the country. The character has undergone changes after the table read.

American Dream Builders did a 0.9 on Sunday night. That's not gonna bode well if it plans to stick around for a full season.

Photo courtesy of EW.com.

Robert Kirkman previews the upcoming season finale of The Walking Dead. “'This last half of season 4 has been a character defining group of stories for everyone,' Kirkman tells EW, “but really, Rick Grimes — really finding what this guy is going to be able to do and how he is going to carry on, and is he going to get these people back together, and where is he going to go from here? And I think there are some big questions that are asked that are going to be answered in this final episode.”

Molly Shannon and Mike White are helping people become better dog walkers:

Per Variety, "The Hub Network will soon attempt to see if it can reach beyond its grasp.The network, jointly owned by cable programmer Discovery Communications and toy maker Hasbro, expects to gradually abandon the reruns of Step by Step, Family Ties and Sabrina, The Teenage Witch in favor of originals designed to lure kids and families together. The first step in that effort is Parents Don’t Just Understand, a 22-episode reality series from Endemol’s 51 Minds Entertainment hosted by Joey Fatone that is slated to debut in the fall. The series will let kids and parents get a peek at what it’s like to live inside each other’s shoes." Here's what Fatone has been up to in the interim:

The Breakfast Club came out 30 years ago this week. Feel old?

I don't watch, but people are STILL buzzing about Sunday's episode of The Good Wife.